Patient Perspectives of Skeletal Muscle Cramping in Dialysis: A Focus Group Study

Author:

Grandinetti Amanda1,Hilliard-Boone Tandrea S.2,Wilund Kenneth R.3,Logan Dilani4,St Peter Wendy L.5ORCID,Wingard Rebecca6,Tentori Francesca7,Keller San2,West Melissa8,Lacson Jr Eduardo910,Richardson Michelle M.910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Kidney Health Initiative Patient and Family Partnership Council, Washington, District of Columbia

2. American Institutes for Research, Health, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

3. Department of Kinesiology and Community Health, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, Illinois

4. American Institutes for Research, Health, Oakland, California

5. College of Pharmacy University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

6. Fresenius Medical Care North America, Clinical Services, Waltham, Massachusetts

7. Davita Clinical Research, Minneapolis, Minnesota

8. American Society of Nephrology, Washington, District of Columbia

9. Dialysis Clinic, Inc., Nashville, Tennessee

10. Tufts Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Key Points This first step demonstrated content validity for a patient-reported outcome measure for skeletal muscle cramping in dialysis.This work lays the foundation for developing a patient-reported outcome measure for regulatory use to assess skeletal muscle cramping in people receiving dialysis. Background Skeletal muscle cramping is a common, painful, and debilitating symptom experienced by people receiving dialysis. Neither a standardized, patient-endorsed definition of skeletal muscle cramping nor full understanding of patients' perspectives of skeletal muscle cramping exist. We conducted focus groups, within a Kidney Health Initiative (KHI) project, to elicit skeletal muscle cramping experiences of people receiving dialysis as the basis for patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) development. Methods Eligible participants (English-speaking adults aged 18–85 years treated by dialysis and a skeletal muscle cramping episode within 30 days) were purposively recruited from a panel (L&E Research) of people receiving dialysis at home or in-center. Standard qualitative methods were used to conduct virtual 90-minute sessions discussing the following: skeletal muscle cramping clinical characteristics, participants' skeletal muscle cramping experiences, and feedback on a draft skeletal muscle cramping definition and a patient-facing conceptual model developed by the KHI project workgroup. We used qualitative thematic analysis. Results There were 20 diverse participants in three focus groups. Universally experienced skeletal muscle cramping attributes differed by dialysis setting in onset, worst pain rating, duration, and timing. Variably experienced attributes (applied to home and in-center dialysis) were gross and fine motor effect, sleep disruption, mood-related themes of fear, and annoyance/frustration/irritability. Avoidance/adaptive behaviors included reluctance or avoiding movement, adjusting what they ate or drink (e.g., yellow mustard, pickles, pickle juice, and tonic water), heat application, massage, and cannabidiol use. The skeletal muscle cramping definition was endorsed, and insightful suggestions for conceptual model were collected. Conclusions This qualitative study of in-center and home patients' skeletal muscle cramping experiences identified universally and variably experienced attributes. The patient-endorsed skeletal muscle cramping definition can serve as a standard for assessment. These results provide the foundation to develop a PROM for regulatory use with people receiving maintenance dialysis who experience skeletal muscle cramping.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology

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